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Welcome to the Megyn Kelly Show your home for open, honest and provocative conversations. Today, Trump has covered and the media is melting down. So what does it mean for this race less than a month out from Election Day? Joining us today, voices from the right and the left in a very well sourced White House. Reporter with the inside scoop. Everyone, it's Megan Kelly, welcome to The Megan Kelly Show. So Trump has covered his doctor, lied, so did the media.

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Just another day in America. I've got a lot of thoughts on what's been happening now with Trump's diagnosis. And the first lady's along with about 40000 others in and around the president. But my number one takeaway is we would all be better served if we could trust that Dr. Trump's got to get somebody out there who doesn't engage in puffery or real estate sales by trying to change the information we're getting and just lays it on the line. The guy had a high fever.

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He had some oxygen. He's doing much better. Great. We got it covered is not pleasant, but so far it doesn't seem that awful. Why can't they just be straight? That's fine. That serves the president and it serves us. But of course, the media did what the media does and went full on conspiratorial on us.

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And of course, we can't trust them either. So hopefully that's where we come in as we're going to try to give it to you straight.

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We've got voices, as I said, from the left and the right. Today, we've got Namiki Consed. She's a she's a lefty. She used to come on the Kelly file all the time. She's good, although she did something a little controversial which we're going to get into. We've got Olivia Newsie, she's from New York magazine. She's also from the left. And I think you're going to find what she has to say about the media covering this story.

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Pretty provocative. And we got Dana Loesch, one of my personal favorites. She's a nationally syndicated radio host and she is raring to go on the Democrats attempt to push back the Amy CONI Barrett hearings because they say this cannot possibly go forward given the the covid outbreak we've seen on Capitol Hill. She's got some thoughts. So all that going on today. But first, before we get to it, I want to talk to you about Palm Industries now.

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Do you carry pepper spray with you? You might consider it because it's discreet. It's out.

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Some people don't feel comfortable carrying a firearm here in New York. You're not allowed to. So pepper spray is kind of all we have. So has a nice, sleek design. I'm looking at one right now. It's like the size of your middle finger, which is kind of appropriate given what you use pepper spray for. It's sleek, it's pretty, and it's something you could plop in your purse and you wouldn't even know it was there in like the inside small pocket or guys in your pants pocket.

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They say this is the face of self defense in America and that it really shouldn't be daunting. Right. You should be able to use it easily, quickly without having to worry about, like accidental misfire or leakage, which, you know, you go into. Grab it while you're in the Whole Foods or the grocery store. And the last thing you want is like accidentally get yourself in the eye. You don't have to worry about that with this.

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And now Olivia Newsie.

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Is your head spinning from the past 72 hours or longer? I mean, my head is spinning from the last five years of covering Donald Trump.

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This is this is a relationship with irreconcilable differences. And the consequences of those irreconcilable differences are center stage, because the media, in my opinion, has not reported fairly on Donald Trump and Donald Trump and the White House have, of course, lied to the media. And now we're seeing the consequences of that destructive, awful relationship.

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It's been more of the US or the punditry in media that's gone off the rails.

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Donald Trump sets the tone for his White House. If people if he cannot trust his most senior staffers, which has been consistently the case since the beginning of his political career, certainly that seems like a Donald Trump problem, not a senior staffer problem. Right. If it's been true under every chief of staff, it's been true under every regime in this White House on the campaign, both campaigns.

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That strikes me as a problem with the executive. Well, especially with Trump said he hires the best people. And so it's like, well, only the best. And well, I think I think it's a situation where No.

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One, Trump is the most unusual leader we've had in generations. And the way he is in general is he's a destroyer of things. He's a wrecker, which is why he got hired. They wanted to go down in Washington and just wreck it. And and he's been doing it. And so that's why his core supporters are like, great, may not be the prettiest package, may have a lot of rough edges, but we'll take it because status quo wasn't working for us.

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Mitt Romney was the perfect package. He looked good. He had the perfect hair. And there will no hair is not perfect.

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It's it's it's debatable.

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Is debatable. I actually ran my fingers through that hair one time. Olivia and I can confirm it's not really a comb over. It's like it's all there. It's legit.

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But anyway, it feels kind of like a cobweb to me. I think it was actually quite nice.

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If you want to know the truth, I'll defend President Trump's hair, I think very soft hands to it. If he doesn't if he doesn't overspray it, it's better. But anyway, I think that's why. So it's like if you're if you want a truly pleasant working environment, that's probably not where you go to work in any White House, no one, but certainly not in their Trump White House. But I also think it goes back to my irreconcilable differences because the press exit on and the press wants to foment, you know, controversy within these guys and make it like a Game of Thrones or team of rivals.

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When you look, everyone wants to talk about the the leftward media bias in the press. And I think that there is certainly some legitimacy to that criticism that we could spend hours and hours talking about. But I think that the the bigger truth is that the press is biased towards conflict. We want drama. When we watch any event, we read any speech, when we watch any interview or conduct any interview, what are we looking for? We're looking for the conflict.

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We're looking for the friction that is usually the easiest way to protect, even if they're not. You know, I think it goes beyond I think this is true before getting clicks was even something that a phrase that people would recognize right before you could click on anything. I think that friction and drama, I mean, it's like it's just like entertainment, right? It's what's the next development? It's the easiest way to push the story forward is to have some sort of lurch in the direction of conflict.

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And I think that's stimulating to that's what they say.

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So what what now? Speaking of the press and if dishonesty, I've got to ask you specifically about one guy, Gabe Sherman, this guy, he's at Vanity Fair now. But can I say you this guy, he made his name reporting on Roger Ailes and Fox News. This is the only reason people know that name at all. And I used to read his stuff blogs at Fox because it concerns my workplace and the people I worked with.

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And sometimes me and I would say Gabe Sherman had his facts right less than fifty percent of the time, you know, someplace between 40 and 50 percent, but was 100 percent wrong all the rest of the time.

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And somehow this past four reporting and he was allowed to go on and on, he would he would have one source for something who would be anonymous and they would let him run with this. And now he's doing his same act over at Vanity Fair.

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And it seems to me he's been let he's been allowed to run loose too long because one of one of his reports over the weekend, and I will quote sources, Kolan Trump had heart palpitations on Friday.

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High fever are his fever reached one hundred and three and a G seven. Allai wonders if he'll appoint a ivonka president instead of Pence. He's lost it. I mean, for and it's like not how the Constitution works. Oh, my God, Paul.

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How did they let him how do they let him put that out there? Look, I have no insight into the process there. There are some fantastic editors at Vanity Fair, Gabe Zimmerman wrote for New York magazine for a very long time, which is obviously where I work.

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Was going to do the budget, not mentioning much, much of his work. There certainly was extremely consequential and important work holding people in power accountable. I don't want to speak ill of a former colleague, but I think that in the Trump era, there have we've seen time and time again, there kind of been there's been this lowering of standards, I think, when it comes to what we will abide with sourcing, what we will abide with. Just kind of a.

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Gut check on common sense when it comes to reporting on this president, and I think that we across the board have sometimes permitted things to get by or be promoted that don't make very much sense. And I don't mean to. Attack, attack a former colleague, and I don't want to as I said before, I think on balance the reporting in the Trump era has been very good. I know you disagree with that assessment, but I think that across the board.

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We permit things to kind of storylines, narratives take hold that if it were on the other side, I don't think that we would absolutely know about Barack Obama. I don't think that we would. But it's more complicated than this. Right. We could talk about this for. Yes, we could go.

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I just straight and I could do I could do 25 examples. But this in a sea of egregious press statements, this one stands alone.

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I mean, there was an editor at BuzzFeed who I thought made a very good point about this report, which is that this now is not the time to do shit like this. Now is not the time to single source outrageous claims or use attribution. Like one Republican said, like, what the hell does that mean? One Republican that that could be a Republican, could be anybody. Right. If you're someone who knows and this is not about Gabe in particular, actually writing a story about this very thing right now about these anonymous Republicans in the Trump era, what does this irritate you?

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Because when you have somebody like that putting out nonsense, total nonsense like that, first of all, it's not news that someone might wonder if he's going to appoint a VANKA instead of. That can't happen. But it's not news that someone is wondering about that. It's just sensationalistic. Just like his other tweet over the weekend about how you could you could see the fear in Donald Trump's. It's like Gabe STF, you just stop. You're not helping. And in my view, he undermines reporters like you who I don't think you're pro Trump, but you do at least have sources.

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I read your stuff all the time. I've always known you to be fair, and you have sources and you won't report it until you have sources. And I think there's too many Gabe Sherman's out there who are like, I smell problems for the president. Let's go with it.

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Well, I think that the problem you were talking about the Rush reporting earlier, and I think that there are there has not been a media reckoning on how the Russia story was handled. And there were a lot of things that I found to be totally egregious and totally embarrassing about how that story was handled and how the left was allowed to kind of conspiracy monger about that. And still, it's still pervasive, these conspiracies and how that was taken seriously in a mainstream way.

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And I find the same to be true about a lot of stories that are questionably sourced about the president and his mood or whether or not he's fuming. And a lot of those stories are legitimate. I hear from people who are with the president and say he's in a bad mood today or he's screaming today. That doesn't mean that all of those stories are not legitimate. But I think, you know, as someone who sophisticating that the media you'll read something with the sourcing is not quite right.

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Right. It doesn't seem that solid. But I think, unfortunately, there are a lot of people who really started tuning in to the day by day coverage of this administration or politics in general on November 9th, 2016, who are not as sophisticated. And they get fooled by this kind of stuff. And I think it's very dangerous. It's kind of it's how I felt about reporting on me, too. If The New York Times is going to spend a year on investigation, they make sure has no holes in it.

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They're rock solid on everything. It does not help anyone's cause to run some anonymously sourced allegation someplace else.

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I'm trying to remember who originally broke the ridiculous Julie Sweatiness gang rape allegations involving Brett Kavanaugh, obviously untrue and peddled by, as Tucker calls them, creepy porn lawyer Michael Finnerty, who's now the guy facing felony charges. To me, that's a sign of intelligence on your part, right? You if you're defined by who your enemies are. I always laugh because it's like over the past couple of years, I've had I've gotten a big dustups with Anthony Weiner, Steve Bannon and Michael Abenaki, two, all of whom are either under indictment or already went to prison or likely to.

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So it's like I feel pretty good about is reporting something the other day. And I was just telling my boyfriend this morning, I was like, you know, I'm going through my Rolodex of sources and I'm trying to confirm something like half the people are like in jail or indicted or have Kovil like Jesus Christ. Can we just, like, get everyone calm down so I can continue to report on this administration is talking about drinking or the fire hose of news.

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It's been it's been like the fire hydrant these past couple years. OK, so where does that leave us? Where does that leave us now with the elections barreling down upon us on November 3rd, what do you what do you think is likely to happen with Trump getting back on the campaign trail, which, you know, he's itching to do?

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And how do you think this whole thing affects the race? Well, before we could talk about Trump getting back on the campaign trail, I think we have to talk about him getting back on his feet. We have no idea right now at the time that you and I are speaking, we still do not know the last time the president tested negative. The White House is not giving us answers about that. We do not know what exactly is wrong with his lungs.

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His doctor is very evasive about that. His doctor, I think, is sowing doubt and distrust in what this administration is telling us. What the White House is telling us, I think, is doing the president a tremendous disservice. I think before we can talk about. Whether or not he's going to get back on the campaign trail to know whether or not he's OK. And right now we can there is no reliable information coming out of this White House or from the.

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That's the most irritating thing about Dr. Connelly. Right. It's like if he wanted to not tell the truth about Trump's fever or his oxygen, he should have just said, I have no information for you on that at this time or we're not going to get into that and just make it obvious. I don't want to talk about it, but the last thing you do is lie. And even when he came out and acknowledged his lie, you know, he admitted that he was trying to paint a more rosy picture.

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And that said, when he owned up to it, he said it and I quote, I didn't want to give any information that might steer the course of illness in another direction. Apparently, that means he didn't want to, like, dampen Trump's spirits. And in doing so, you know, it came off that we were trying to hide something which wasn't necessarily true.

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What necessarily doctors me. You're no good at this. You're not you're no good at this. Are back into the is the hour you go.

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Yeah, no, I mean, Doogie Howser over there with his good vibes only approach to briefing the public. I don't think that this is going to work out very well for the president. And I understand a lot of people talk about the pressure that they feel to please the president when they talk to the media or when they go about their job. It doesn't have to do with interfacing with the media. There's a lot of anxiety about pleasing the president, and I could see how it could lead to this type of situation.

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But I don't think that the president is helped in the end. And I don't know if he knows this. I don't think that he's helped in the end by having someone out there making it seem like this is Weekend at Bernie's. And that's kind of how it's going. That's Biden's gig.

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Trump should not get in. But, you know, but I think that just back to the campaign, I saw a lot of allies of the president, campaign surrogates mocking Joe Biden yesterday, even after all of this started. After the president did his little covid parade outside of Walter Reed, I saw the mocking Joe Biden saying, oh, the president still did more more public events today than Joe Biden. They're still trying to push this narrative that Joe Biden is like an old, sick and not well enough to be out on the campaign trail even when the president is hospitalized with the virus that has killed two hundred thousand Americans.

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I think that is ridiculous. And I think their lack of a message is really going to hurt them in this sprint to Election Day.

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But Joe Biden hasn't exactly been ubiquitous.

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I mean, as we both know, there are ways of communicating. But he the guy puts a lid on the press it like eight oh two in the morning. Right. So it's like let's send Joe Biden doesn't have a strategy of staying in his basement and doing a weekend at Bernie's. Maybe it's true.

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Maybe we'll find out that he's benefited tremendously from from the fact that this virus has permitted him to stay out of all of you and stay away from the press. And he does not have to risk having a gaffe a minute, as he ordinarily would if.

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And it gives him the excuse if it gives him the excuse of just looking like he's being responsible. But meantime, there are lots of ways of speaking with voters and the press that are covid, friendly, safe, and he's not going to do it. And I don't I understand why it's working for him. If I were his adviser, I'd say thumbs up, keep it rolling because you're winning. And that's the predicament Trump's in now, is that Biden is winning, according to most of the polls.

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And Trump, he has time and he also probably has the secret to Trump voters. But he's going to have to do something. He's going to have to do something between now and November 3rd to appeal to those women and seniors.

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Olivia, it's always good talking to you. Thank you. And get some sleep. Thank you. Dana Bash is coming up in a minute, but first, let me talk to you about super soft chews. If you have to try these things, you're missing out. They are delicious. I mentioned them on another show, and my good friend in Chicago was like, I'm buying those. And she endorsed them as well. That's because they're tasty and they're actually good for you.

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And when you buy two bags they'll give you the third for free. That's get super beets, dotcom slash amk. And without further ado, Dana Loesch. So what a crazy weekend I. I was. I took my kids to this fall festival over the weekend and we were there were going down the slides and they were going through the corn maze. And I'm looking at Twitter like, oh my God, what right were you having the same reaction?

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Yeah, well, I wake up every single day and I just wait to see what trends. So one of the first things that I do in the morning is I will actually go to trending topics and see what's up, because it's always some goofy phrase or something and saying that you couldn't that you did not have on your 20 20 bingo card. And then I just then that's how the day starts. The day predictably takes on that insane tone.

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Right. Well, I you know, the headline was basically Trump lied about when he got Korona, you know, and it was he got it. He got it Wednesday instead of Thursday. And of course, I'm like, what?

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And as it turns out, you can blame that somewhat on the media, but mostly on the doctor that Dr. Connelly, who came out and was like 72 hours ago.

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That guy, I'm telling you, like, I feel like he was the biggest loser of the weekend. Right.

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Because he just sacrificed his credibility. He was all over the place with information and now we can't trust him.

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Yeah, and I don't know if he was just trying to be careful with his words and I was really trying to give him the benefit of the doubt because I kept telling myself, OK, he's a doctor, he's not really a media professional. And he probably never anticipated himself being in this position. But just it was just kind of cagey with some of the stuff that he would say. And it required the White House to come back and kind of clarify a couple of things.

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And then when he was explaining, for instance, some of the drugs that they were giving the president and what they seemed almost contradictory. I mean, I only play a pretend I'm a pharmacist on air, but they seemed like they would work against each other. And I do wish that he would have explained just a little bit more about exactly why they were giving the president the drugs that they were and in tandem like they were, because it just it just made everyone question even more.

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And it was already an insane topic. And it had already been a whirlwind kind of story because what it's like, it was just like a couple of days and then the president was back at the White House. So, yeah, I really wish it's almost like they needed somebody, a media professional there to say, OK, now you need to explain to the press exactly why you gave him after a run this severe, why you gave him this other antiinflammatory that is used to treat all this other stuff, because then you had Twitter being the doctor and we've already had Twitter, the gorilla experts.

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We've already had Twitter, the space experts. Now we have Twitter, the the pharmacist. And you can't ever trust Twitter. But apparently that's how the media gets the basis for their story so that we are.

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And it's like I like Dr. Connelly at first, like, OK, this guy is going to be a straight shooter, is going to give us the information. And then then he says all sorts of wrong things. Right, that Trump had it for seventy two hours and that wasn't true and that they began treatment 48 hours earlier and that wasn't true later had to come out and clarify. And then he explicitly said they hadn't given him oxygen on Friday. And then twenty four hours later, I had to admit that wasn't true.

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Yeah, I get it. If you want to protect your your patients privacy, to some extent, it's hard when it's the president and keep his attitude up. But the choice there is then to just say we're not going to talk about that, that we're not going to talk about and just be just be honest about your caginess as opposed to lying, because now he's done us all a disservice because we no longer trust him. So I understand why some of the press lost its mind, because the last thing you can do to the press is let them catch you in a direct contradiction.

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When it has to do with Trump, they're going to kill you. Right? If this is if this has been Obama's doctor, they would have been giving the guy a total pass. But it's Trump.

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So no, but look at all the most intense criticism we've seen, I think has been over the Secret Service car right on.

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Trump went out on Sunday and did a little ride around with the crowd waving from inside with the windows up.

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And to me, Dana, it was funny because after after months of protesting in the face of law enforcement getting in the face of the Secret Service right outside of the White House and telling them to f off basically spitting all over them while they're screaming at them, you know, the Black Lives Matter protest and so on, suddenly, suddenly the left is very concerned about the health of the Secret Service and really wants them treated with more respect. Yes, exactly.

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Suddenly, blue lives matter, I guess, and I think that that's a great point as well, because here nobody was concerned at all whatsoever about the Black Lives Matter protests and how they could be super spread or event. And in fact, you will not find any reporting at all whatsoever of them being treated as such. But the weird thing about this is how do they think Trump got to the hospital? He didn't. Harry Potter is separate from the White House into his presidential suite at the at the hospital at Walter Reed.

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He had to get in a chopper with Secret Service. And then everybody became and this is my favorite, Megan. Everyone became expert on the presidential car and they were saying, well, you know, it's basically it's sealed tight and there's all the germs are in with them together in this tube and they're all probably going to die. And then there were other people, engineers and people who are familiar with the way that the automobile was constructed that say no, actually, he's in his own probably little blastoff vestibule inside.

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There's there's thick double glass between him and Secret Service in the front seat. Since you all need to know this so very badly that I mean, I think that is an important issue. And the fact that the way that this is why people don't trust legacy press and we really want to right now, we desperately would love to that we want that to have that relationship. But stuff like this is why we can't. They were apoplectic over this yesterday.

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It was trending all day so. Or the other day. So I you know, I look at this and I, I don't think it was a huge deal. I don't think it was. I mean, he had his face mask on. Secret Service had their face mask on. He's the president. He's got to be protected. I just it was it was so over the top, I. I don't know. I'm waiting to see what else we call.

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And not only that, the Secret Service, to your point, not only were they in a car with him in a helicopter with him days earlier, but do people think the Secret Service, like they don't get anywhere near the president, they're protecting his life?

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That's kind of their job, to stay within six feet of him and make sure nothing bad happens. And no one knows whether they have Secret Service agents who already have the antibodies or what was done to protect them. So it's all speculation.

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And my own feeling was watching the hysteria, the hysteria over that car ride was that what's really driving their anger over this is not the car ride. It's over coronavirus misinformation in general and over Trump in general.

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They they get him.

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Yeah, he disrupts. Well, he also if he's if he's recovering as quickly as it's said that he is and it would appear that he is and it completely disrupts the narrative that the press has been telling everyone this entire time, because the way that the way that the story works is that the moment you contract coronavirus, then you're pretty much a fatality. That's kind of how they present it. And all of this discussion, they have never put into context the severity of the cases, nor have they put into context the recovery rate, which is incredibly important, particularly if you're hyping the fatality rate.

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And so they sold this as oh, well, you have it. It's a fatality. And it was just ghoulish the way that they were sort of just waiting on standby to see if the president's condition was going to deteriorate more. And then he tweeted out the photos of him working and he tweeted all this other stuff out of him. Apparently, he was sending pizzas to the supporters outside, something like every forty five minutes he was sending pizzas or something like that, which I thought was which I thought was kind of funny.

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But then he's right now he's back at the White House and they give word that he's ready to assume a full work schedule. He's going to be doing the whole social distancing and quarantining. And that really contradicts what the media has been trying to tell the public. They've been trying to sell us on continuous lockdown. We need to lockdown again and even more. None of the kids should go to school. You should wear a mask all the time, even in your own home.

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And for crying out loud, some people are saying even during intimate times with your partners, you should stop it for crying out loud.

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It's just who says because. Because. Oh, man. Alive they have actually been. I've talked about this on on radio. They are there have been some academics in the field of science who have said, well, perhaps it's best that we even incorporate math usage in the home and maybe even in the bedroom. And I know nobody is doing that. You don't put more things on. But that's a whole other topic I don't like.

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I haven't taken this close look at it, but like aren't there like is the coronavirus immune to all bodily fluids or just just the the stuff that comes out of your saliva?

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I don't get but I'm just thinking like if I'm going to incorporate a mask into my bedroom routine, it's going to be like a leather one. I don't know. I just like make the most of it. But I'm just thinking this is an area where I do not want doctor. Dr. Falchuk, get out.

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Yeah. That no, I do not want Dr. Phyliss advice in that in that area. And I especially do not want a national mandate on facial prophylactics.

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No. You need no help in spicing up your bedroom routine. This I. So about the two of you, so, OK, so the the other the other problem they have is that, you know, Trump, he does seem to be doing better. And you've had you know, we talked about this a minute ago, but you've got reporters like Vanity Fair's Gabe Sherman tweeting out nonsense over the weekend about this is the quote, just watch Trump's hospital video a second time.

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His breathing is so clearly labored, he seems to be leaning on the table for support. And there's so much fear in his eyes.

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Oh, my gosh. So they invest in a narrative that the guy's on his deathbed. And then when he's driving around and he's returning, it's like it can't be.

[00:29:55]

It can't be. Yeah, yeah, the drama of it all, he should be he should write for Harlequin that should that should be his next gig in case this one falls through that. It is this ghoulish desire to to see there. I mean, honestly, their wish fulfilled. I really think that they would love the chaos that something of that consequence would throw the nation into. And Trump dying. Yeah. If you were to if you were to heaven forbid, if this were if it were to suddenly deteriorate and reverse and he would go the other way, which doesn't seem like that's the natural progression.

[00:30:33]

Once you contract this virus, you and he's I mean, despite the fact that he is in an older age demographic, he's still I mean, he's what I think a little overweight, he said himself. But he's relatively healthy. He doesn't really have any vices. He's kind of straight edge. He doesn't have any vices except maybe perhaps the stress of the job. But that's about it. And so MacDonald, even with. Yeah, and with other with some of these other variables factored into it.

[00:30:57]

I mean, he still has, what, a ninety nine or ninety five. Ninety nine percent symptom recovery rate. I mean it's incredibly high.

[00:31:04]

No one wants to talk like it. I think his age has like a ninety four, ninety four point seven or nine, almost ninety five percent recovery. But yeah they do, they have been treating this as though it's a stage for pancreatic cancer, you know, just to get the diagnosis at seventy four years old. And it isn't true, it's it's riskier.

[00:31:22]

And certainly when you're overweight like Trump is, thanks to the McDonald's, you know, it's riskier, but the odds are overwhelmingly in his favor.

[00:31:31]

And you can just sort of sense there's a hope behind too many of these Democrats that something awful will happen. And some of them actually put it in writing, which we've talked about. You know, some of them actually said, like Hillary Clinton's old spokesperson expressly saying, I hope he dies. I hope it. I mean, it's just gotten to that level.

[00:31:49]

And there's a reason why they would like for that to be prolonged. And the first and foremost, the biggest reason is that Trump and coronavirus, because of the narrative that have been published for months now, that is where he is. That's the most difficult for him in polling. And now here is we're coming down the homestretch towards November. They they need to not have the attention shift from any kind of focus on the economy and the economic gains. I think what is it that it's the it's the fastest that we've ever seen in our nation's history.

[00:32:17]

We're going to have two economic comebacks in the span of a four year period. So as long as the news focuses on that issue, that's a really, really well for Trump because people vote their wallets. And I think with the exception of one individual, there's only there's never been a president not re-elected under a good economy. So they have to have this focus on coronavirus because that is what the media has made his weak spot and that has been his weak spot in some battleground states with some independents.

[00:32:45]

And so that's what they need to focus on.

[00:32:47]

That's why that's one of the reasons why him getting in at this time and it becoming spreading like wildfire throughout his closest people is bad. It's no question it's politically bad for Trump because it does make it look like the thing that he's weakest on has come back to hobble him right in his home. I want to ask you about the latest polls that were just out. And I always say I don't I don't have that much faith in the national polls. The swing state polls are more interesting.

[00:33:11]

But it's interesting to me that the latest Wall Street Journal NBC poll has now Biden with a with a 14 point lead, 53 over 39 to Trump. And they said the biggest advantage Biden just gained was between was with older voters and suburban women. And Reuters Ipsos has a similar. They have Biden up now 10 points. And so the question I know Trump always says, I want I won, I won the debate. But the truth is the polls suggest he did not win the debate.

[00:33:39]

And I wonder whether we now have an answer to whether his behavior at that debate did hurt him with not his core supporters, but the folks he really needs on his side, like older voters who he won last time. But they seem to be migrating over to Biden. Right, and I haven't looked at any of the details for this, any of the crosstab information from it, so I don't know where they're pulling, where they're what area they're pulling their voters for, what the how widespread is.

[00:34:05]

But I am curious to see what this does in the next week as well as as the polling reflects, like maybe maybe or maybe there maybe there isn't even one.

[00:34:16]

Let me shift gears with you and ask you about Amy CONI Barrett in the hearings now, because we're already hearing some Democrats come out and say we cannot do this. The remote participation that Mitch McConnell is suggesting we can do is inadequate for a lifetime appointment. And this needs to be postponed and we can't get her confirmed. Now, Will is inadequate or not, it would work absolutely fine, and I know you and I were talking earlier and you made the point that if our kids are are being they're doing remote learning and this is education for, I think most of the year, not for school.

[00:34:54]

If this is good enough for them, this is completely appropriate for this, particularly since the Constitution doesn't mandate here.

[00:35:00]

We don't have to have a hearing at all. They didn't just to have little to.

[00:35:04]

No, they didn't. And Mitch McConnell, I mean, if he really wants to be savvy about it, he can say, OK, you know what? I understand how nervous you all are. Let's go ahead. Just hope. But we won't even bother with the hearing. We'll just have a vote right now. That might be kind of a gamble for him. But at the same time, I think people would like the aggressiveness of it. But, yeah, there's nothing wrong with having a remote hearing.

[00:35:22]

And Amy Berridge, someone out of the candidates that we that are on the list, she's already been pretty well vetted. Obviously, not everyone who everyone in America knows who she is. A lot of people are hearing her for the first time. But I mean, if they're nervous about having the hearing and go ahead and have the vote. But either way, the president served for four years. Not very. Let's get it done.

[00:35:43]

Yeah, they they've already had twenty one hearings remotely since the pandemic began.

[00:35:48]

And and the point I was just trying to make is, is if it's good enough for my kid to learn remotely, then it's good enough for you senators to learn remotely about Amy Barack attack right now.

[00:35:58]

Why the double standard? Why do you have to actually be sitting in the same room with her in order to understand?

[00:36:03]

It's an obvious Davich because they don't not getting there, they're not getting their brutal footage. This is the campaign footage they all get. They all get footage of them yelling at this woman, just like they all got some footage of themselves yelling at Cavanaugh. And then that's what they go and raise money, what they want, the spectacle of it. They want the theater. It's all a Victorian freak show. That's what they want. And but at the same time, part of me really wants a hearing because they always overplay their hand every single time.

[00:36:29]

And they absolutely I guarantee it they would with Amy Barrett as well. That is the only attraction that that for me that I have with these with with this whole process, I would like hearings just to see them overplay their hand.

[00:36:43]

Well, you may get it via remote. We'll find out. Dana, so good to hear from you. So, so good to be with you.

[00:36:49]

Good to talk with you, Megan. Congrats again. Thanks on Susan. We've got Democrat Namiki contest coming up in a second, it's fair to say that she and I had a few tense moments, some disagreements over some actions she engaged in recently, which we'll bring to you. But first, I want to talk to you about Legacy Box. It's an ingenious mail and service to have all those irreplaceable moments trapped on videotapes, camcorder tapes, film reels and pictures converted to DVD or digital.

[00:37:17]

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I've actually got my legacy box right here. I'm going to send in my old VHS tapes. I've got ones of me doing aerobics. Yes, I do. Yes. That's how I put myself through college and law school. And I've got some old tapes from my early days at Fox that I think are kind of funny. And I'd love to see them on a DVD. And I'm a sentiment and I'll let you know how it goes for me.

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[00:38:41]

Before we get to know, Mickey, we want to bring you a feature on the Megan Kelly show that we call Real Talk. It's basically my chance to talk about something going on in my life or something personal that's happened to me that I want to talk to you about. And today, it's Richie Sambora and Jon Bon Jovi. Yes.

[00:38:56]

Like most girls who grew up in the 80s, I love Jon Bon Jovi, the band. I love Jon Bon Jovi. And I also love the band Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora. But it wasn't until later in life that I actually met Richie Sambora at a charity event down south and he was helping raise money for a bunch of kids, which is what he always does. And I loved the guy. Super sweet. Not at all.

[00:39:19]

What you think when you meet a rock star, like, sort of, I don't know, grass or Wethered.

[00:39:25]

Right. He was just super warm and kind and self-deprecating. Well, it turned out about a year or two after that, Doug and I were on vacation with our family and who was at the same hotel but Richie Sambora. So we spent a week with a guy in Hawaii, more than a week, basically on vacation with Richie. We played tennis with him. You haven't lived you've seen Richie Sambora and his tennis whites just so incongruous. But he was so kind.

[00:39:50]

He was so good with my kids and we just fell in love with the guy. Well, flash forward to just last night, and I'm scrolling through Twitter and I see an article by Jon Bon Jovi giving an interview. And, you know, Richie left the band and those two had a falling out as so often happens. And that's fine. But honestly, Jon Bon Jovi never misses an opportunity to take a hit on Richie Sambora. Richie Sambora wrote all of that band's greatest hits.

[00:40:15]

That's why he's in the Songwriters Hall of Fame, as well as the Guitar Players Hall of Fame. He he is the talent behind Bon Jovi. And that's why Bon Jovi is not what it used to be without Richie Sambora. So fine, they partied. They should be classy about it and say, OK, we had a lot of good years. Honestly, Jon Bon Jovi should just be quiet when it comes to Richie Sambora, because what he said in his article, because he's promoting a new album was that, oh, you know, I really wish that Richie were still part of the band.

[00:40:41]

It's too bad, you know, if only he had his life together. And then he goes on and says, you know, it's because of his inability to get it together that, you know, I went on to write this other great song that I'm really proud of a couple of years ago. So shot after shot, Richie is a hot mess. Richie doesn't have his life together. He can't get it together and so on. Now, I do know Richie Sambora, trust me when I tell you he has his life together.

[00:41:06]

He's making money hand over fist, of course, because he gets a lot of money on the songs that he wrote and he's still writing great music.

[00:41:12]

But Richie Sambora, as you know, has a daughter right now with Heather Locklear. And Heather has had a rough few years, as you've probably seen in the tabloids. And guess who's been taking care of their daughter Richie and their daughter Eva has turned out beautifully. She's doing really well. She's a college. She's a super together kid. Ritchie's a great active father, which leaving the band helped him be at a time when their kid needed it. And on top of that, I just want to tell you a quick story about Richie.

[00:41:41]

During covid, one of our lowest points was my son, Yeats, who's now 11, lost his music teacher to covid. It was awful, Mr. Sarrell. He was the sweetest guy, you loved him. I mean, how often is it that your kid comes home and just keeps talking about one teacher? Well, that was Mr. Sarrell for Yates. And sadly, he died from covid and it was awful for the whole community. Well, Richie Sambora heard about it and he contacted us and said, I want to talk to Yates, who, again, he had met in Hawaii briefly.

[00:42:14]

He talks to Yates, he said, I, too, had a music teacher who I loved. I understand the importance they can play in your life. They were on the phone for hours. Shortly after they hang up, Richie Sambora sent a guitar to our home, an electric guitar for my son with a huge amp, by the way, and contacted us saying, I want to teach you how to play guitar. I want to help him learn music after the loss of Mr.

[00:42:44]

Sarrell. And can I tell you that my son Yates has been doing Zoom's once a week with Richie Sambora for months now.

[00:42:53]

This guy is busy. This guy still is pursuing a very busy and successful music career. And he takes an hour out of his time, week after week to sit with my 11 year old. So he still has someone to look up to in the music world. So you can pound sand Jon Bon Jovi, because Richie does have his life together. He's a beautiful man and he's been nothing but class, you could take a lesson. And now on a lighter note, Namiki Consed.

[00:43:27]

Joining me now from the Democrat side is Mickey Cost, Mickey used to come on my show, The Kelly File, all the time, and she was always a fierce loyalist to the Democrats, but a reasonable person, a reasonable person on these issues. Now, Mickey, great to have you here.

[00:43:41]

Thanks for having me, Meghan. And congratulations on a great show. You you. Thank you so much. I my own personal belief is that the reason Democrats are so angry about that Trump car ride with the Secret Service isn't exactly about the Secret Service. It's just it's like a metaphor for him doing what they think is reckless when it comes to coronavirus. And they just you know, they're resentful over six months of what they think is misinformation and poor leadership.

[00:44:12]

Poor examples. What do you think? I think you're you're absolutely correct.

[00:44:15]

I mean, this was a symbol as you was a metaphor of of his not just his disconnect from the facts, but his he is he's not just reckless.

[00:44:26]

He's so obsessed with his own politics. And in that and he is also an emblem of the entire Republican Party. I mean, just this week, Mitch McConnell with three senators now who have tested positive for for covid.

[00:44:40]

Mitch McConnell wants to call an immediate meeting, an urgent meeting to discuss the appointment of Amy Barrett. But, you know, I think the disconnect that Democrats are seeing with Republicans is really in empathy. And it is there's there's no hiding the truth at this point. I mean, the president obviously has called it, but there's no hiding the truth that they're more concerned with politics than winning the Senate and winning the presidency over the lives of not just at this point.

[00:45:08]

It could be millions of Americans, but their own president. And I mean, I was out in Arizona this week just a couple of days ago. I was in Scottsdale, Arizona, and I saw one of these pop up rallies and Trump rallies. And it was a Kuhnen rally. And I walked through and I wanted to ask everybody, you know, where do you what do you get your information from? And immediately without even, you know, thinking through who I could be was a reporter, they they all ganged up on me saying, you know, we don't listen to fake news like you.

[00:45:40]

And they didn't know I had a mask on. They didn't know who I was. And they immediately said, well, we get it from Kuhnen. We don't trust anybody else. And many of them thought that the president didn't have covid and those who did think he had covered for it was part of a plan.

[00:45:54]

So this is the information from the base of the most loyal Republican Party members and Trump loyalists. And that spreads.

[00:46:03]

And so let me tell you on that. Yeah, maybe the Kunhardt folks out there thought that. But I saw a tweet by Joy Reid over the weekend saying, I've got a cell phone full of text from people who aren't sure whether to believe Trump actually has covid he lies so much are our one friend texted and or one friend texted. She said, is he just doing this to get out of the debates? Others are texting now. That's put out by a primetime news anchor at MSNBC.

[00:46:28]

I mean, come on. Yeah, I mean, listen, I think Joy Reid has an interesting history with the facts, but that's a whole other conversation for another.

[00:46:38]

I you know, and this is one of the issues that I think we have in cable news is there are a lot of folks on there who may not necessarily understand the complexity of politics. And that's why I love when I see different sides come together and you see Republicans and Democrats actually think through the issues on cable news. First off, Trump does want to look weak. So why would he make up the fact that he has called it?

[00:46:58]

I mean, that is he's a fear of that. And he also doesn't want to acknowledge his failure of handling covid. And even beyond that, I mean, the fact that Kuhnen is so desperate to say that he doesn't have it shows that he actually has it because they're trying to cover up everything that he does. They try to pretend to the loyal base that doesn't consume any other news. They're trying to pretend that, you know, any weakness is not there.

[00:47:24]

At least he's I think your your point is right, though.

[00:47:26]

He doesn't. He always wants to project strength. There's no way Trump would invent covid when he didn't have it, especially because this is the last thing he wants in the news all the time.

[00:47:36]

Covered, covered, covid covered. You know, he wants to talk about the economy. He wants to talk about Amy CONI Barrett. He wants to talk about what he says was a win in the debate, though the polls suggest something else.

[00:47:44]

But he doesn't want to talk about coronavirus at all. And this this undercuts everything Trump wants to do. So there's zero chance he invented this. However, I do think there was a reason to be upset over the crazy doctor, Dr. Connelly, over the weekend, who was like, it started seventy two hours. Oh, no, it was 48 hours. And he had his first medication for, you know, it was 24 hours. Oh, and everything super rosy.

[00:48:08]

Oh, no, I just lied because that's what my patient wanted me to do.

[00:48:11]

Who am I you about, if that's what he saw.

[00:48:15]

Take a seat, sir. Is there a nurse somewhere? You know, exactly.

[00:48:21]

I don't want to hear from Dr. Connelly ever again. No, I mean, that was an embarrassment.

[00:48:25]

And I. I wish, you know, at this point, I don't even know what to say, how you hold the presidency, you know, the White House accountable for something like that.

[00:48:34]

But I think this point also most of the news media can see through it. You know, the last thing that they think is really important to keep in mind here is most people are voting right now. I mean, really, like most people, a good chunk of America is voting right now in Arizona, where I just was, you know, at that rally, 80 percent of Arizonans vote early. That is before covid, that is before 2020.

[00:48:57]

That is something, you know, Republican governor leads the state of Arizona. This is not a this is not a left wing issue. So you have folks going to the polls right now. And so if he wants to make the case to the American people or to the three percent of undecideds, wherever they may be, he needs to be on the trail. He needs to be on camera regularly. And, you know, you know Donald Trump, he doesn't want to be off the camera.

[00:49:21]

He wants to be in control of the narrative at all times.

[00:49:24]

So he's going to be out there. His surrogates will be out there. But there's only one Trump. And exactly. I mean, I see your point, but I do think it's tough. I mean, it's tough. It's easy for President Trump to gin up enthusiasm among his loyal supporters and make sure they get out to the polls. The bigger challenge has been to gin up more support amongst those who have left him or on the fence about him.

[00:49:45]

And that's that's the work he has to do between now and November 3rd. But I mean, you know him, he's going to be as soon as he is physically able, he's going to be back out there. I want to ask you this.

[00:49:54]

So I don't I don't know.

[00:49:57]

I know people are saying they're very angry at him and some are suggesting that the fact that half the White House now seems to have been infected, it's like Hope Hicks, Trump Lodhia, the assistant to the president, Kellyanne Conway, Chris Christie, Mike Lee, Senator Thom Tillis, Ron McDonald, John Jenkins from Notre Dame, who was at the Amy Koni, Barrett, Bill Stepien, his campaign manager. Senator Ron Johnson. I could go on. Right.

[00:50:16]

So it's like this certainly seems to have spread awfully fast. You know, in part, we assume due to precautionary measures not having been taken. But does that actually affect the vote? Because I do think in general, Republicans are of the view that one takes responsibility for one's personal choices. You know, no one forced Chris Christie to go into the debate prep room without a mask on for a week. And, you know, people make different choices depending on their risk level and the situation they're in.

[00:50:42]

And I just don't know if the American public is going to be like Trump bad because of the covid outbreak. They're. Again, I think it's you know, 2016 was decided by by two things, very low turnout among certain demographics in really working people making under fifty thousand dollars who traditionally vote for Democrats. They didn't turn out the rates that they expected in 2016, but also it came down to fifty thousand votes in three states. So if the three percent comes down to whether it's the Rust Belt or the Sunbelt, depending on the strategy, you know, it's it's how that three percent sees this crisis as an emblem for all races.

[00:51:29]

I think in previous years, maybe the last 10 or 15 years, Democrats have relied heavily on the presidential ticket. It seems like it's actually coming from the grassroots this time around, folks, if they don't feel like like Bidens organizing enough or maybe they do, they still are organizing through their own independent groups for four local candidates, statewide candidates. And so, you know, they just did the enthusiasm. It needs to be at levels that we haven't seen probably since 2008 to be able to make up for anybody who may not be able to.

[00:51:59]

I mean, he tried Biden has tried to move Republicans over. Maybe he did. Maybe he moved a few of them. But the counter to any voter suppression or folks not, you know, thinking that the virus is indicative of Trump's failures is really for Democrats to turn out at record.

[00:52:15]

And my personal view is that Biden didn't move anybody anywhere. Trump moved everybody everywhere. If you're in Trump's Camp Cropper and if you're out of Trump's camp, Trump got you there. He know, like Biden has just been sort of sitting down behind his big mask saying, like, go for it, sir. I'm just going to watch, watch and learn a question to you about some of the hypocrisy. And I understand, you know, that the ride in the Secret Service car, why it was controversial.

[00:52:42]

But I was pointing out earlier that part of the problem is it's tough to get people really upset about this. When we had the Black Lives Matter protests all summer and people were like, oh, the virus understands not to attack people who are protesting over perceived racial inequality. People are like, what? How smart is this thing? And the Ruth Bader Ginsburg memorial is like impromptu gatherings on the Supreme Court where everybody was on top of each other, not to mention the march on Washington where people were jammed in like sardines, like sardines.

[00:53:12]

And so, you know, I think a lot of people are looking at this like, can you can you spare us can you not lecture us on Trump's, you know, two minute ride outside of Walter Reed in his sealed car with Secret Service agents who may or may not have had any antibodies or taking the risk unwillingly? We don't know. But you know what I mean? It's like it's tough to take the protestations and the expressions of shock seriously.

[00:53:35]

Well, you know, a couple of things, we don't really know what happened with all these other scenarios because most likely the folks aren't as speakers as well known. What was interesting about the Black Lives Matter protests over the summer and the uprising was a good chunk of folks were wearing masks. And I could say everybody clearly they were all over the country and it was outside. And there is a lot of evidence to say that being outside with air flow makes a huge difference.

[00:54:02]

So just putting that aside. But. I think what's really going on when when Trump gets in takes a ride around Wall Street, when reports are saying he is being you know, doctors are working in multiple ways, trying to treat him from every single direction, I think it just shows how desperate he is to prove that he is strong at a moment and that shows how desperate he is and how worried he is about these polls.

[00:54:28]

Why does it show that he's just trying to reassure his supporters he was sending the pizza out to give people an uplifting moment? I mean, I saw on Twitter over Saturday people who I really like on Twitter who are, you know, in the middle saying we should be nice if you just tweet something like just a little worried about him. And then he did put out a couple of videos. But I think, why can't it just be an attempt to reassure people he is OK, don't believe people's suppositions that he's, you know, on death's door.

[00:54:55]

And, you know, I'm good. I'm here, I'm getting treated, but I'm good. OK, I want to ask you about you mentioned the Kuhnen thing and you went out to the rally. This is in Arizona. So we have a clip of you interviewing the folks out there. And I wanted to follow up with you on this.

[00:55:08]

So let's listen to something I want to read incapacitated. How would you say that? He's admitted, as his doctor did. That's how he actually did it yesterday, right? No, I just he just did a press conference. He's been laying his doctor, this one on air. But an hour ago, he said he's laying down. Capacitated, don't think I'm not I'm not debating you challenge the word incapacitated, said he's not, but my husband is taking over duties because he is incapacitated.

[00:55:44]

He's not incapacitated.

[00:55:46]

What are you doing in why? Why? Well, great information like that. Well, granted, that was to be fair. That was two days ago. Two days ago. And so the news that morning, right before the press conference was saying that the vice president was likely to take over duties because he was incapacitated, but now was that there were no confirmed news reports that said that.

[00:56:06]

So he says so the problem that he was having was that she came to me. Now there's a much larger video.

[00:56:12]

There's ten and a half minutes of this in which she said, you know, he's lying down, he's fine. He gave a rally yesterday. So there was more to this conversation and that she she came in and she's like, by the way, only person of color comes to me, has a script. There's they're organizing going to media because they want to, you know, portray themselves as a diverse group of Trump supporters. But, you know, she was very scripted.

[00:56:34]

She said he gave a rally yesterday and he didn't give a rally as he's capacitated. Now, granted, this was minutes after the press conference in which he was being admitted. The doctor said he was admitted as a patient.

[00:56:46]

They did not know very well he wasn't incapacitated then because I'm just giving you Ejaz, because you said that these are, you know, sort of their tin hat folks who don't understand information and don't have their facts. But what you said is not true and you are misleading in that exchange.

[00:57:01]

Well, there's OK, so I hear what you're saying here. And there's the legal definition of incapacity that we all know now, two days later, after there's been a public conversation about whether or not Vice President Pence is taking over the two days prior when this conversation, when they just asked the doctor, is he how is he doing? He's laying down. He is resting. He is he a patient? He's a patient.

[00:57:24]

Will the vice president over does not mean that I am incapacitated every night from 10:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m..

[00:57:29]

That's what she said. That's the difference, is that you're not in Walter Reed Hospital and they're not having conversations about vice president taking over. I know that. But the conversation that no one was having a serious conversation about Vice President Pence taking over, nobody don't need.

[00:57:41]

The president's detractors were saying that I know they want him. Who's all over the media in the press conference, they ask these questions in The New York Times.

[00:57:50]

Shouting a question at the Mark Meadows doesn't mean people are talking about I mean, that's like a reporter looking for a headline you were suggesting. It's like the White House may be transferring power under the 25th Amendment. Right. So, anyway, I got to give you a hard time about that, because I feel like, you know, the folks are out there, they're supporting and some people genuinely are scared and love him. So I would say that wasn't your best move.

[00:58:12]

You know, but this is also this this is an example of why it's important to have consistent information coming from the White House, because it is changing by the minute. You know, that morning, CNN everywhere during the press conference, the conversation was very much around, is vice president going to take power and control power or at least take over the duties of the day while he's in the hospital like they did with George W. Bush when George W. Bush had a a minor medical procedure and he had to go under with anesthesia.

[00:58:39]

So, I mean, this isn't like the transfer of power. What happens, you know, four months before the election, before inauguration, it's really just about what happens when a doctor says he's a patient at a hospital and he's still I'm still banging the gong on this one, getting the hook and banging the gong.

[00:58:56]

But listen, I love talking to you and I appreciate you coming on. Thank you so much, Megan.

[00:59:04]

The vice presidential debate is on Wednesday night, we will have full coverage of that for you the very next day. And in the meantime, if you want to look back at another episode, go take a look at the interview I did with Adam Corolla, which I absolutely love. Listen to Adam Corolla and cancel culture and you will feel like a bad which has gotten scratched in like a good, healthy way.

[00:59:24]

Not in a weird I need ointment, which in the meantime, if you like the podcast, go and subscribe. You got to go to Apple and download and subscribe. Apparently get to do both of those things in order for it to be a good thing. And while you're on there, give me a rating five stars below and also send me a note if you read a review. I've been going and I've been reading them and actually she's been so sweet.

[00:59:45]

I love it. It's so nice to hear some of your comments about the journey that you've taken with me along the way. And I always love connecting with my audience, so know that I am reading them. And so keep it clean and keep in mind until the next no B.S., no agenda and no fear. Megan Kelly's show is a Devil May Care media production in collaboration with RedZone Ventures.